Wednesday, 18 October 2017

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 19th October 2017.

The 2017 Adelaide Film Festival drew to a close on Sunday evening 15th October after eleven days of showcasing the finest in local South Australian, national Australian and international films either recently released or in many cases receiving the Australian or worldwide Premier screening. This year there were ten feature films in Official Competition which included six Australian Premieres and features from around the festival circuit including Cannes and Toronto. They were Boris Khlebnikov’s 'Arrythmia', Mikhail Red’s 'Birdshot', Ofir Raul Graizer’s 'The Cakemaker', Luca Guadagnino’s 'Call Me By Your Name', John Cameron Mitchell’s 'How To Talk To Girls at Parties', Rungano Nyoni’s 'I Am Not A Witch', Mahommad Rasoulof’s 'A Man Of Integrity', Pedro Pinho’s 'The Nothing Factory', Joachim Trier’s 'Thelma', and Ruben Östlund’s Palme d’Or winner 'The Square'.

The closing night film this year was the Sophie Fiennes Directed documentary 'Grace Jones : Bloodlight and Bami'. IMDB summarises the noted film which also opened the Documentary section at TIFF earlier this year, as 'larger than life, wild, scary and androgynous - Grace Jones plays all these parts. Yet here we also discover her as a lover, daughter, mother, sister and even grandmother, as she submits herself to our gaze and allows us to understand what constitutes her mask.' It goes on to say 'in Jamaican patois, 'Bloodlight' is the red light that illuminates when an artist is recording and 'Bami' means bread, the substance of daily life. 'Grace Jones: Bloodlight and Bami' weaves together the layers of Grace Jones' public and private life, as she moves effortlessly between different facets: she is gypsy, artist and partying hedonist, warm and funny but also a fierce and tenacious businesswoman.'

In terms of official competition winners and grinners, these are :
2017 Adelaide Film Festival International Best Feature Fiction Award, presented to :
* 'I Am Not A Witch' closed TIFF this year, was shown in the Directors Fortnight at Cannes this year, and is the highly acclaimed Directorial debut of Zambian born Welsh raised Director and Screenwriter Rungano Nyoni. Telling the story of a nine year old orphan girl Shula (newcomer Maggie Mulubwa) who, following a banal incident in the village where she lives, is accused of witchcraft. After a hasty trial at which she is found guilty, she is banished and exiled to a camp in the middle of the nowhere desert, with mostly elderly women 'witches'. At the camp her initiation ceremony is where she is shown the rules surrounding her new life as a witch. Like the other resident witches, Shula is tied by a ribbon which is attached to a coil that is tethered to a large tree. She is told that should she ever cut the ribbon, she'll be cursed and transformed into a goat. Combining magic realism, social commentary and a deadpan sense of humour it is the talented cast of no-name Actors that persuaded the Jury, that this was the standout winner.

2017 Adelaide Film Festival Flinders University International Best Documentary Award, presented to :
* 'Taste of Cement' is Directed by Ziad Kailhoum in only his second documentary feature film outing, and was Written by him too. This film poignantly paints a picture of construction workers in exile. Described as an empathetic encounter with people who have lost their past and their future, locked in the recurring present. Here the Director has crafted a documentary of Syrian construction workers building new skyscrapers overlooking the city of Beirut out of the ruins created by the Lebanese civil war. At the same time their own homes are being bombed back in Syria. A curfew prohibits them from leaving the construction site after the days work is finished and so every night in their meagre and makeshift dwelling below the skyscraper the news from their homeland, the memories of the war and what they left behind plague them. Mute and imprisoned in the cement underground, they must endure until the new day arrives where the hammering and welding drowns out their nightmares, unable to construct any sort of life for themselves . . . only others, and in a country where they are alienated, unwanted and disenfranchised from society.

2017 AFTRS (Australian Film, Television and Radio School) International VR Award, presented to :
* 'Nothing Happens' Directed and Written by Michelle and Uri Kranot, this twelve minute animated short Virtual Reality film presents a new way of looking. It's a film about spectatorship, about watching and being watched. Its about being present.

Turning attention back to this week then, there are six new films to tease that movie going dollar from out of your wallet. We launch with a Norwegian set serial killer thriller chiller based on one of a hugely popular collection of novels; then we go to the mother of all cataclysmic climatic conditions that promises to wreak storm and tempest down on an unsuspecting world that only one humble man can prevent; before moving onto a Victorian England horror offering of murder most foul at the hands of a legendary creature. We then go to a RomCom  featuring a recently separated Mum of forty getting all jiggy with a twenty something year old lodger lad with far reaching consequences; and up next is a doco of the 1,200 mile pilgrimage of eleven Tibetans that takes seven months to traverse on foot, while lying down prone on the ground every seven or eight paces or so out of their faith and devotion to their God. We then wrap up with an animated feature of a young lads journey to connect with his long last Dad, and discovering more than he bargained for when he eventually does.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the six latest release films as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release and as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are here cordially invited to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon experience during the coming week.

'THE SNOWMAN' (Rated MA15+) - here we have the first in what may turn out to be new film franchise for this Norwegian crime fighting detective Harry Hole, based on the Oslo Crime Squad character created by Norwegian author Jo Nesbo in the popular series of novels that have been translated into forty languages and having sold over thirty million copies worldwide. Harry Hole appears in eleven novels so far, first launched in 1997 with 'The Bat', taking us up to 2017 with the release of 'The Thirst'. 'The Snowman' upon which this film is based is the seventh book in the series and was published in 2007. This film is Directed by Tomas Alfredson, whose previous Directing credits include the acclaimed 'Let The Right One In' and 'Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy'.

Research reveals that Harry Hole (here portrayed by Micahel Fassbender) is a brilliant and driven detective prone to using unorthodox methods in his work, a classic loose cannon in the police force. Hole is unmarried and he has few close friends. He frequently makes enemies among his colleagues who, nevertheless, grudgingly respect him. He is a chain smoker and heavy drinker, although for the most part has his reliance on alcohol under control. The effects of his problems however, sometimes bring him into repeated conflict with his superiors, and some colleagues. Hole is also one of just a handful in the force to have undertaken special interrogation techniques and firearms training with the FBI. In this story Hole investigates the disappearance of a female victim during the first snowfall of Winter. He soon deduces that a serial killer, known as 'The Snowman' may be responsible and active only during the season. He teams up with talented recruit Katrine Bratt (Rebecca Ferguson) and together the pair must trawl through decades old cold cases to connect the dots to the latest killing spree if he is to thwart this elusive killer before another grisly murder is carried out. The film also stars Charlotte Gainsbourg, Val Kilmer, J.K. Simmons, Toby Jones, Chloe Sevigny and James D'Arcy, has so far taken US$9M and has garnered less than favourable Reviews.

'GEOSTORM' (Rated M) - here Dean Devlin Co-Writes, Co-Produces and for the first time Directs this Sci-Fi disaster action film that was made for a budget of US$81M with principal photography beginning three years ago in October 2014. Come late 2015 and test screenings met with a generally poor response resulting in extensive reshoots occurring in late 2016 and into early 2017 with the added bonus of new Producer Jerry Bruckheimer coming on board to deliver the film that is released this week. Set in the near future when a bunch of satellites circle our planet controlling the weather conditions, it only takes an unforeseen malfunction to see the worlds climatic circumstances change with cataclysmic consequences. It takes Jake Lawson (Gerard Butler) to don his space suit and launch himself headlong into the outer reaches to fix the problem with the satellites that he designed in the first place, before a storm event takes place like no other the world has ever seen. The film also stars Jim Sturgess, Ed Harris, Andy Garcia and Abbie Cornish.

'THE LIMEHOUSE GOLEM' (Rated MA15+) - this British horror mystery film is Directed by Juan Carlos Medina, based on the 1994 novel 'Dan Leno and the Limehouse Golem' written by Peter Ackroyd. The film had its world premier at TIFF way back in September 2016, and was only released in the UK on 1st September this year and now gets its limited Australian release this week. The story unfolds when a series of murders occurs in the Limehouse district of east London in Victorian England. These deaths shake the local community who believe that a mythical creature from the dark days - the legendary Golem - must be responsible. Leaving cryptic messages written in the blood of its victims, Scotland Yard assignes the case to Inspector Kildare (Bill Nighy), a seasoned detective, who is determined to crack the case. With a list of suspects narrowed down from a diary of the Golem's crimes supposedly hand written by the Golem itself, Kildare must rely of his sense of detection, the help of witnesses, and his instincts to bring the supposed Golem to justice and put an end to the murders. Also starring Eddie Marsan, Olivia Cooke, and Douglas Booth. The film has so far taken less than US$2M despite generally favourable Reviews.

'HOME AGAIN' (Rated M) - this RomCom is Directed by first timer Hallie Meyers-Shyer and Written by her too and stars Reece Witherspoon as Alice Kinney a recently separated mother of two young children who has relocated back to Los Angeles and moved in with her mother Lilian Stewart (Candice Bergen) and has designs on establishing her own interior design business. About to celebrate turning the BIG 4-Oh! Alice meets Harry, George and Teddy (Pico Alexander, Jon Rudnitski and Nat Wolff respectively) three aspiring film makers who all need some place to live. Alice decides to let the three men reside in the guesthouse temporarily, but complications soon begin to manifest themselves when Alice and Harry begin an affair and her new found freedom and happiness is on the verge of collapse when her ex-husband Austen (Michael Sheen) arrives on her doorstep carrying a suitcase. The film cost US$12M to make and has so far grossed US$30M and has garnered average Reviews since its Stateside release in early September.

'PATHS OF THE SOUL' (Rated PG) - this Chinese film was Written, Produced and Directed by Zhang Yang are premiered at TIFF back in 2015, before being presented an numerous film festivals on the circuit over the following two years or so. The film was released in China in June this year, and has been highly acclaimed by Critics and audiences alike. The film chronicles the journey of eleven ordinary Tibetans as they take the cross country pilgrimage of twelve hundred miles from their home village to Lhasa, prostrating themselves on the ground every seven or eight paces or so along a journey that lasts seven months. An extraordinary story of human devotion, faith and redemption featuring stunning vistas of Tibet through the seasons.

'THE SON OF BIGFOOT' (Rated PG) - is a Belgian and French co-produced CGI animated feature film Directed by acclaimed Belgian animator and CGI artist Ben Stassen, with Jeremy Degruson. This story tells of teenager Adam Harrison (Pappy Faulkner) who sets out on a journey to find his long lost father, only to discover that he is in fact the legendary Bigfoot. He has been in self imposed exile hiding in the forests for years to protect his family and himself from an unscrupulous company who want to exploit Bigfoot's DNA and conduct scientific experiments on him. As father and son begin to bond, young Adam discovers that like his father, he has been gifted with super powers that include being able to converse with animals. However, it's not long before the company who have been tracking Adam's whereabouts, close in on father and son with potentially dire consequences for them both. The film has met with critical acclaim for its top notch CGI animation, story telling, and production values. A film for kids of all ages.

With six new release films this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, taking in a snowbound serial killer crime thriller; the mother of all weather conditions; a Victorian England horror mystery; a RomCom; a prostrating pilgrimage; and a family friendly animated feature suitable for kids of all ages. Remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephiles afterwards here at Odeon Online, and meanwhile, I'll see you sometime somewhere in the week ahead at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Saturday, 14 October 2017

Birthday's to share this week : 15th - 21st October 2017.

Do you celebrate your Birthday this week?

Viggo Mortensen does on 20th October - check out my tribute to this Actor, Author, Musician, Photographer, Painter and Poet Birthday Boy turning 59, at the end of this feature.

Do you also share your birthday with a well known, highly regarded & famous Actor or Actress; share your special day with a Director, Producer, Writer, Cinematographer, Singer/Songwriter or Composer of repute; or share an interest in whoever might notch up another year in the coming seven days? Then, look no further! Whilst there will be too many to mention in this small but not insignificant and beautifully written and presented Blog, here are the more notable and noteworthy icons of the big screen, and the small screen, that you will recognise, and that you might just share your birthday with in the week ahead. If so, Happy Birthday to you from Odeon Online!

Sunday 15th October
  • Tanya Roberts - Born 1955, turns 62 - Actress
  • Michael Caton-Jones - Born 1957, turns 60 - Director | Producer
  • Todd Solondz - Born 1959, turns 58 - Director | Writer
  • Dominic West - Born 1969, turns 48 - Actor | Director
Monday 16th October
  • Tim Robbins - Born 1958, turns 59 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer | Singer | Songwriter
  • Gary Kemp - Born 1959, turns 58 - Songwriter | Actor 
  • Flea (aka Michael Peter Balzary) - Born 1962, turns 55 - Actor | Songwriter
  • Kenneth Lonergan - Born 1962, turns 55 - Writer | Director | Actor
  • Angela Lansbury - Born 1925, turns 92 - Actress | Producer | Singer  
Tuesday 17th October
  • Felicity Jones - Born 1983, turns 34 - Actress
  • Lawrence Bender - Born 1957, turns 60 - Producer | Actor
  • Rob Marshall - Born 1960, turns 57 - Director | Producer | Choreographer
  • Eminem (aka Marshall Bruce Mathers III) - Born 1972, turns 45 - Singer | Songwriter | Actor | Producer | Writer
  • Matthew Macfadyen - Born 1974, turns 43 - Actor 
Wednesday 18th October
  • Howard Shore - Born 1946, turns 71 - Composer | Songwriter | Orchestrator | Conductor
  • Jean-Claude Van Damme - Born 1960, turns 57 - Actor | Producer | Writer | Director 
  • Zac Efron - Born 1987, turns 30 - Actor | Singer  
  • Freida Pinto - Born 1984, turns 33 - Actress
Thursday 19th October
  • John le Carre - Born 1931, turns 86 - Writer | Producer | Actor
  • Michael Gambon - Born 1940, turns 77 - Actor
  • John Lithgow - Born 1945, turns 72 - Actor | Producer | Singer 
  • Jon Favreau - Born 1966, turns 51 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer
  • Trey Parker - Born 1969, turns 48 - Actor | Producer | Writer | Director | Singer | Songwriter 
  • Jason Reitman - Born 1977, turns 40 - Director | Producer | Writer | Actor 
Friday 20th October
  • Timothy West - Born 1934, turns 83 - Actor 
  • Thomas Newman - Born 1955, turns 62 - Composer | Singer | Songwriter | Orchestrator | Conductor
  • Danny Boyle - Born 1956, turns 61 - Director | Producer | Writer
  • Viggo Mortensen - Born 1958, turns 59 - Actor | Producer | Singer | Songwriter  
  • Snoop Dog (aka Calvin Cordozar Broadus) - Born 1971, turns 46 - Actor | Singer | Songwriter | Producer | Composer | Writer | Director 
  • John Krasinski - Born 1979, turns 38 - Actor | Producer | Director | Writer | Singer
Saturday 21st October 
  • Ken Watanabe - Born 1959, turns 58 - Actor | Producer
  • Catherine Hardwicke - Born 1955, turns 62 - Director | Producer | Production Designer | Writer
Viggo Peter Mortensen Jnr. was born in New York City to mother Grace Atkinson, and father Viggo Peter Mortensen Snr. She is American, and he Danish. The couple met in Norway. The family moved to Venezuela , then onto Denmark and then Argentina, where the young Viggo attended primary school and where he became fluent in Spanish. At age eleven, his parents separated and so Viggo Jnr. returned to New York with his mother  where he spent his remaining childhood years attending Watertown High School, in New York and from where he graduated in 1976. He then went on to study at St. Lawrence University in New York graduating with a Bachelor's Degree in Spanish Studies and Politics. That was 1980, and thereafter he spent time living in Spain, Denmark and England where he took menial jobs to pay his way before returning to the US to take up an acting career.  He has two younger brothers, Walter and Charles, both of whom work as geologists. 

In 1984 Mortensen appeared in the television mini-series 'George Washington' with the likes of Beau Bridges, Robert Stack, Hal Holbrook, James Mason and Trevor Howard, and the following year appeared in a single episodes of the long running day time television serial 'Search for Tomorrow'. It was also in 1985 that the aspiring Actor gained this first feature film role in Peter Weir's 'Witness' alongside Harrison Ford, Kelly McGillis, Lukas Haas and Danny Glover. This gave way to a single episode on 'Miami Vice' then a few movies seeing out the '80's including Renny Harlin's horror crime drama 'Prison', then 'Fresh Horses' with Molly Ringwood, Ben Stiller, and Andrew McCarthy and then 'Tripwire'

From 1990 Mortensen scored regular feature film work year on year kicking off with 'Leatherface : Texas Chainsaw Massacre III' and then action Western 'Young Guns II' with Keifer Sutherland, Emilio Estevez, Christian Slater, Lou Diamond Phillips and James Coburn. Horror thriller 'The Reflecting Skin' and then the Sean Penn Directed drama 'The Indian Runner' with David Morse, Charles Bronson, and Dennis Hopper. 'Ruby Cairo' with Liam Neeson, 'Boiling Point' with Wesley Snipes, 'The Young Americans' with Harvey Keitel, led to the Brian de Palma Directed 'Carlito's Way' with Al Pacino in 1993.

The years that followed upto the end of the decade saw Mortensen star in a host of 'B' grade movies whilst others shared more notable mainstream success. Included in the latter were Tony Scott's 'Crimson Tide' with Gene Hackman and Denzel Washington; Jane Campion's 'The Portrait of a Lady' with Nicole Kidman and John Malkovich; the Kevin Spacey Directed 'Albino Alligator' with Matt Dillon and Faye Dunaway; the Rob Cohen Directed 'Daylight' with Sylvester Stallone; Ridley Scott's 'G.I. Jane' with Demi Moore and Anne Bancroft; the remake of Hitchcock's 'Dial M for Murder' with 'A Perfect Murder' starring Michael Douglas and Gwyneth Paltrow; and Gus Van Sant's frame by frame remake of the classic Hitchcock thriller 'Psycho' with Vince Vaughn and Julianne Moore seeing out the '90's.

2000 saw comedy drama offering '28 Days' with Sandra Bullock and Dominic West, before what is best described as his breakout roll in 2001 as Aragorn in Peter Jackson's epic trilogy 'Lord of the Rings : The Fellowship of the Ring' which was followed up with 2002's 'Lord of the Rings : The Two Towers' and in 2003 by 'Lord of the Rings : The Return of the King'. The three films went on to huge commercial and critical success winning a combined sixteen Academy Awards plus another 425 award wins and 384 further nominations. In terms of worldwide Box Office the three films cost a total US$281M to bring J.R.R. Tolkien's books to the big screen, and raked in a combined US$2,92B.

Following the four year 'LOTR' trilogy hiatus, Mortensen remained in the saddle (literally) with the Joe Johnston Directed historical biographical action adventure offering 'Hidalgo' with Omar Sharif. His first collaboration with Director David Cronenberg came in 2005 with 'A History of Violence' also starring Ed Harris and Maria Bello. The film was nominated for two Academy Awards and walked away with another 37 award wins and 78 nods. Spanish historical adventure drama 'Alatriste' came next in 2006, followed by his second outing for Cronenberg with crime drama 'Eastern Promises' with Naomi Watts and Vincent Cassel for which Mortensen was nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award from its total award haul of 28 wins and another 71 nominations.

Next up for Mortensen in 2008 was the Ed Harris, Co-Written, Directed and starring crime drama Western 'Appaloosa' with Renee Zellweger, Jeremy Irons and Timothy Spall, followed by WWII drama 'Good' with Jason Isaacs and Mark Strong. This in turn led to the Cormac McCarthy adaptation of his post-apocalyptic adventure drama 'The Road' as Directed to Critical acclaim by John Hillcoat and also starring Kodi Smit-McPhee, Charlize Theron, Robert Duvall and Guy Pearce.

2011 saw Mortensen's third collaboration with David Cronenberg in the historical biographical drama 'A Dangerous Method' in which Mortensen plays Sigmund Freud opposite Michael Fassbender's Carl Jung. The film also starred Keira Knightley, and Vincent Cassel and collected 18 award wins and a further 28 nominations from around the traps. 'On the Road' followed a year later with an ensemble cast in the adventure drama film also starring Sam Riley, Garrett Hedlund, Kristen Stewart, Amy Adams, Elisabeth Moss, Kirsten Dunst, Terrence Howard and Steve Buscemi. The Argentinian crime thriller 'Everybody Has a Plan' followed also in 2012, and then the romantic thriller 'The Two Faces of January' with Oscar Isaac and Kirsten Dunst in 2014.

2014 also saw the historical drama offering 'Juaja', and then the French drama film 'Far from Men'. This took us up to 2016 and Mortensen's turn in the highly regarded 'Captain Fantastic' as Written and Directed by Matt Ross and also starring Frank Langella, Steve Zahn and a cast of six child Actors all portraying Mortensen's somewhat dysfunctional children raised in remote woodlands totally isolated from the world for ten years, only to have to reintegrate into mainstream society as a result of the tragic and unexpected death of their mother. The film received generally positive Reviews and Mortensen was nominated for the Best Actor Academy Award, Golden Globe, BAFTA and SAG for his performance out of its total fourteen wins and 43 other nominations.

Next up for Mortensen is 'Unabomb' currently in pre-production and telling the story of an FBI Agent who leads an unconventional team on the hunt for notorious Theodore (Ted) John Kaczynski (aka 'The Unabomber') who between 1978 and 1995 killed three people and injured 23 others in a nationwide bombing campaign, and who is now serving eight consecutive life sentences without the possibility of parole.  In between time Mortensen established his own publishing company - 'The Perceval Press' to help other artists by publishing their works that may not ordinarily find a home in more mainstream traditional publishing houses. He also uses his own company to publish many of his own personal artistic projects in the areas of photography, poetry, music and literature. His credits as an author on numerous books of poetry, photography and painting extend from his initial collection of poems - 'Ten Last Night' released in 1993 that take in a further seventeen publications right up to 2015. He also combines his love of poetry with music and he also boasts an extensive discography taking in seventeen released CD's between 1994 and 2013.

All up Mortensen has 57 Acting credits to his name, three as Producer, three Soundtrack credits and one as Composer. He has 32 Award wins under his belt and a further 93 nominations including two Academy Awards and two BAFTA nominations for 'Captain Fantastic' and 'Eastern Promises', three Golden Globe nominations for 'Captain Fantastic', 'Eastern Promises' and 'A Dangerous Method', and four SAG nods for Captain Fantastic''Eastern Promises', 'LOTR : The Fellowship of the Ring' and 'The Two Towers' and a win for 'LOTR : The Return of the King'. 

Mortensen was married to Actress and Singer Exene Cervenka from mid 1987 through until 1992, becoming officially divorced in 1997. They have a son together, Henry Blake Mortensen born in January 1988. Since 2009, Mortensen has been romantically linked to Spanish Actress Ariadna Gil.

Viggo Mortensen - fluent in English, Spanish, Danish and French, understands Norwegian and Swedish and can converse in Italian; is a fan of soccer, baseball (the New York Mets), ice hockey (the Montreal Canadiens), American football (the New York Giants); is an accomplished horse rider; has appeared on numerous 'Top' lists over the years including 100 Sexiest Movie Stars, 15 Sexiest Men, 25 Most Intriguing People, the Hottest Hotties and 50 Most Beautiful People; and turned down the role of Aragorn until his son convince him to take it on . . . . thankfully he made the right decision! Known for his cleft chin, soft mellow voice and for portraying rugged anti-heroes with absolute conviction, you are acclaimed in a multitude of artistic endeavours, and you never disappoint. Happy Birthday to you Viggo, from Odeon Online.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-

Friday, 13 October 2017

BLADE RUNNER 2049 : Tuesday 10th October 2017

'BLADE RUNNER 2049' which I caught earlier in the week in 3D, is released 35 years after the original neo-noir Sci-Fi film 'Blade Runner' as Directed by Ridley Scott which upon release polarised critical opinion and took lacklustre Box Office takings of just US$34M from its US$28M production budget. Here then, and finally, we have the long awaited, eagerly anticipated, much hyped sequel, set thirty years after that first film. The intervening years have been kind to the original movie, now elevated to cult status with many Critics hailing the film as one of the best all time Science Fiction movies, also bringing to prominence the work of Philip K. Dick upon whose book 'Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?' the film is loosely based. Starring Harrison Ford as Rick Deckard, Rutger Hauer as Roy Batty, Sean Young, Edward James Olmos, Daryl Hannah and M. Emmet Walsh, the film was nominated for two Academy Awards, one Golden Globe, won three BAFTA's and was nominated for a further five amongst its total haul of eleven wins and eighteen nominations. Set in a dystopian Los Angeles in 2019, 'Blade Runner' depicts a future in which bioengineered androids known as 'Replicants' are manufactured by a powerful company to work on off-world colonies. When a renegade group of Replicants led by Roy Batty escape back to Earth in an attempt to prolong their lives, burnt-out LA cop Rick Deckard reluctantly agrees to one last assignment to hunt them down and 'retire' them.

And so this film, which has been in development for approaching twenty years with Ridley Scott on again off again and various storylines coming and going, has finally landed with Director Denis Villeneuve at the helm, Roger Deakins on Cinematographer duty and Harrison Ford reprising his role as Rick Deckard all for a production budget of somewhere in the vicinity of US$175M. Released in the US and Australia last week, the film has so far taken US$93M at the Box Office and early Reviews of the film have met with widespread universal acclaim, with many Critics gushing about the production values, cinematography, CGI, music score, and performances of the principal cast.

Set in a dystopian Los Angeles of 2049, thirty years following the events of the original film, bioengineered humans called 'Replicants' have now been integrated into Earth's general population. Working for the LAPD, K (Ryan Gosling) a more up to date model who is programmed to obey orders and works as a Blade Runner, whose purpose is to hunt down older rogue Replicants and 'retire' them from service.

As the film opens we see K descending in his vehicle on what appears to be a farm where he 'retires' Sapper Morton (Dave Bautista) the farmer breeding synthetic protein maggots on a large scale. There, buried under a large dead tree, he discovers a military strong box which is taken back to LAPD for analysis. Inside there are human remains - carefully preserved bones and hair. Forensics reveal that the remains are of a female Replicant who died from complications from what appears to be an emergency Caesarian Section operation. Further examination reveals a tiny serial number engraved on a bone, revealing this to be definite Replicant remains. K is perplexed as pregnancy amongst Replicants was always believed to be impossible. Later, K returns to the farm for further examination. At the base of the tree he uncovers an engraving of a date which seems to correspond with a date in his own childhood memory about a hand engraved wooden horse which he hid in a redundant incinerator in the orphanage in which he was raised. Before leaving the farm, he torches it, destroying all evidence from those that might come afterwards.

Meanwhile K is ordered to destroy all evidence in relation to this case before word gets out, by his commanding officer Lieutenant Joshi (Robin Wright). She holds the belief that knowledge of Replicants being able to reproduce is dangerous to the new world order and could potentially incite war. K does not necessarily subscribe to this point of view, but he goes along with it. He visits the Headquarters of Replicant manufacturer Niander Wallace (Jared Leto) and is introduced to his Replicant Assistant Luv (Sylvia Hoeks) who helps him identify the body as Rachael, an experimental older model Replicant, but history is scant given the thirty years or so that have lapsed. There is a brief recorded transcript of a former Blade Runner Rick Deckard and Rachael, from which K deduces there was some romantic interest. Wallace who wants Rachels remains for his own analysis, orders Luv to steal the remains from LAPD and follow K as he goes in search of the child, from which he can then engineer Replicant reproduction for the expansion of his off-world operations beyond the nine worlds he currently inhabits.

K visits the orphanage in old Los Angeles where the child is thought to have been raised. There he meets Mister Cotton (Lennie James) who presides over hordes of young orphaned kids whom he sets to work stripping down electrical appliances for spare parts and salvage to sell. There his childhood memory comes rushing back, and searching the incinerator he finds his carefully wrapped up wooden horse, implying that his memory is in fact real, whereas all along he had believed these to be implants. While searching through the birth records for that year (2021) with his holographic female companion Joi (Ana de Armas) he comes across an anomaly in that twins were born that day with identical DNA except for the sex chromosome, but only the boy is listed as being still alive.

K seeks out Dr. Ana Stelline (Carla Juri) a prominent memory designer who advises him that it is illegal to programme Replicants with real human memories, leading K to deduce that he is in fact Rachel's son. K has the wooden horse analysed by Doc Badger (Barkhad Abdi) who finds traces of radiation that lead him to the apocalyptic landscape of old Los Angeles.

There he locates Deckard living the lonely life in an abandoned casino with nothing but books, Whisky and a loyal dog (real or otherwise) to occupy his time. Deckard tells K that he was forced to muddle up the birth records and was forced to leave a pregnant Rachel with the Replicant Freedom Movement to protect both her and their unborn child.

Luv arrives with several henchmen, having tracked K with a homing device planted in his pocket, and having previously killed Lieutenant Joshi. They intend to take Deckard hostage, who has being lying very low for the past thirty years, in the belief that he will lead them to his child to allow Wallace to engineer reproductive Replicants. Deckard and K put up a fight but are no match for the high tech fire power of Luv and her men.

They cart off Deckard, leaving K for dead only for him to be rescued by the Replicant Freedom Movement who take him to their safe house and nurse him back to some semblance of health and strength. Their leader Freysa (Hiam Abbass) tells K that Deckard's child is a girl, shattering K's hopes that he was their child. From this news K surmises that Ana Stelline must be Deckard's daughter given her abilities with implanting the memory into him. Freysa's instructions to K are to prevent Wallace from getting even remotely close to discovering the secrets of Replicant reproduction, by all and any means possible, even if it means taking out Deckard!

Deckard comes around in Wallace's plush HQ surroundings and refuses to co-operate with him, even when prompted to do so by a Replicant duplication of Rachael, which he dismisses because of her eye colour not being of her original green. Luv transports Deckard to one of Wallace's off world colony's to be interrogated and tortured for information that will lead Wallace to his child's whereabouts, even though Deckard really has no clue. K intercepts their fleet of three vehicles bringing down two security vehicles in a blaze of fire and smoke and forcing Luv's vehicle to crash land at the base of a dam, about to release a torrent water supply. Deckard is shackled to his seat while K and Luv fight it out in the rapidly rising waters. Ultimately K overcomes Luv and kills her, allowing Deckard and K to swim to safety. K says that he will report that Deckard drowned in the vehicle so safeguarding him from Wallace and other no good Replicants. K accompanies Deckard to Stelline's laboratory offices to meet his daughter. As Deckard gingerly enters and sees his daughter for the first time, a badly injured K waits outside reclining on the steps in the falling snow looking up.

I liked 'Blade Runner 2049' a lot! The film retains the all the touchstones that made the 1982 film such a classic, and expands upon them without diluting any of what has gone before. It both compliments the earlier film, and stands alone in its own right, and as a companion piece it has the continuity that melds the two films together from the giant neon advertising billboards promoting now defunct organisations 'Atari' and 'PanAm'; through to the Origami paper folding of Gaff (Edward James Olmos who reprises his role very briefly); through to recollections of Rachael. The film is visually stunning down to the smallest details, and the CGI enhances the already solidly smart storyline with visions of a dystopian neon lit, hologram filled future Los Angeles (where it now snows); an apocalyptic garbage dump wasteland that is San Diego; and all the future world gadgets, gizmo's, tech and Sci-Fi notions that you can imagine. A worthy sequel that Villeneuve has made worth waiting for, that will quickly become the cult classic that its predecessor has long since done so, with gritty and convincing performances from its cast, and top notch production values throughout. At a running time of over two and half hours, the film does not outstay its welcome, although it must be said that 'Blade Runner : The Final Cut' has a running time of under two hours.  Earlier this month Villeneuve reportedly said that a third film may be made if '2049' proved a success, and Ford commented that he would be happy to reprise his role if the script added up. Watch this space!

-Steve, at Odeon Online- 

Wednesday, 11 October 2017

What's new in Odeon's this week : Thursday 12th October 2017.

The Adelaide Film Festival launched on Thursday 5th October and runs for eleven days through until 15th October. Founded in 2002 the Adelaide Film Festival has a strong focus on showcasing local South Australian and Australian film product, and is featured in Variety Magazine's Top 50 unmissable film festivals around them world, stating that 'Of the planet’s 1,000-plus film fests, only a select few pack industry impact. A few dozen more, by virtue of vision, originality, striking setting, audience zest and/or their ability to mine a unique niche, also rank as must-attends'. This year, over the eleven days of the Festival, there will be 142 screenings, among them 24 World Premiers, 40 Australian Premiers and many of these high profile films that have only recently aired internationally. Included in this group, are : -
* 'Cargo' - Post apocalyptic zombie thriller. Directed by Yolanda Ramke and Ben Howling and starring Morgan Freeman and David Gulpilil. (World Premier)
* 'Sweet Country' - Australian Western. Directed by Warwick Thornton and starring Sam Neill and Bryan Brown. (Australian Premier)
* 'Bad Blood' - Thriller. Directed by David Pulbrook and starring Xavier Samuel and Morgan Griffin, and Previewed below. (World Premier)
* 'How To Talk To Girls At Parties' - Science Fiction romantic comedy. Directed by John Cameron Mitchell and starring Nicole Kidman and Elle Fanning. (Australian Premier)
* 'The Killing of a Sacred Deer' - Psychological horror thriller. Directed by Yorgos Lanthimos and starring Colin Farrell and Nicole Kidman.
* 'Goodbye Christoper Robin' - Drama. Directed by Simon Curtis and starring Brendan Gleeson and Margot Robbie. (Australian Premier)
* 'Call Me By Your Name' - Coming of age drama. Directed by Luca Guadagnino and starring Armie Hammer and Timothee Chalamet. (South Australian Premier)
* 'Wonderstruck' - Drama. Directed by Todd Haynes and starring Julianne Moore and Michelle Williams. (South Australian Premier)
* 'In The Fade' - German Drama. Directed by Faith Akin and starring Diane Kruger (South Australian Premier)
* 'Mayhem' - Action horror comedy. Directed by Joe Lynch and starring Steven Yeun and Samara Weaving. (South Australian Premier)
* 'Rabbit' - Thriller. Directed by Luke Shanahan and starring Adelaide Clemens and Alex Russell. (South Australian Premier)
* 'Of Body and Soul' - Hungarian Drama. Directed by Ildiko Enyedi and starring Alexandra Borbely and Geza Morcsanyi. (South Australian Premier)
* 'The Square' - Swedish drama satire. Directed by Ruben Ostlund and starring Dominic West and Elisabeth Moss. (South Australian Premier)
* 'The Party' - Comedy. Directed by Sally Potter and starring Timothy Spall and Kristin Scott Thomas. (South Australian Premier)
* 'The Lovers' - Comedy romance. Directed by Azazel Jacobs and starring Debra Winger and Tracy Letts. (South Australian Premier)
* 'The Meyerowitz Stories' - Comedy drama. Directed by Noah Baumbach and starring Dustin Hoffman, Ben Stiller and Adam Sandler. (Australian Premier)
* 'The Florida Project' - Drama. Directed by Sean Baker and starring Willem Dafoe and Caleb Landry Jones. (Australian Premier)
* 'One Thousand Ropes' - New Zealand Drama. Directed by Tusi Tamales and starring Frankie Adams and Nathaniel Lees. (South Australian Premier)
* 'Thelma' - Norwegian supernatural horror thriller. Directed by Joachim Trier and starring Eile Harboe. (Australian Premier)
You'll get all the news, Previews and Reviews, programme details and the highlights and a whole to more at the website : adelaidefilmfestival.org

Turning attention to this weeks nine, yes nine, latest release offerings, we start with an adventure survival story set atop a high snow covered mountain wilderness; then we move to a Noo Yawk based drama involving a father and son gettin' all jiggy with the same woman with far reaching consequences; a just in time for Halloween slasher horror picture that is all slice, dice, repeat; then a cat and mouse one man against the world of terrorists action thriller; before a race against time get outta jail crime drama, and a romantic drama with a green thumb. There are also three Australian new releases this week too that take in a romantic drama comedy that might just work against all the odds; a thriller featuring a remote cabin in the woods, a recently engaged couple and some strange goings on; before closing out with a thought provoking documentary about the ever declining health of our world's oceans.

Whatever your taste in big screen film entertainment is this week - be it any of the nine new release films as Previewed below, or those doing the rounds currently on general release and as Reviewed and Previewed in previous Blog Posts here at Odeon Online, you are here warmly invited to share your movie going thoughts, opinions and observations by leaving your relevant, succinct and appropriate views in the Comments section below this or any other Post. We'd love to hear from you, and in the meantime, enjoy your big screen Odeon experience during the coming week.

'THE MOUNTAIN BETWEEN US' (Rated M) - here Dutch/Palestinian two time Academy Award nominee Director Hany Abu-Assad delivers a romantic adventure survival story based on the 2011 book of the same name by Charles Martin. The film was released in the US last week having Premiered at TIFF in early September, has so far recouped US$14M from its US$35M production budget, and has received generally mixed Reviews from Critics and audiences alike. The project has been in development for over five years with various scriptwriters coming and going and various Directors assigned to Direct, with Abu-Assad scoring the gig in late 2014. Meanwhile a who's who of acting talent were assigned to the principle leads including Michael Fassbender, Charlie Hunnam, Margot Robbie and Rosamund Pike over the intervening years.

The film tells the story of two complete strangers, surgeon Dr. Ben Bass (Idris Elba) and photojournalist Alex Martin (Kate Winslet), who after their flight is cancelled due to adverse weather conditions, charter a light aircraft to get them to their shared destination, piloted by Walter (Beau Bridges). The charter plane crashes in the High Uintas Wilderness in northeastern Utah in the midst of Winter. The pair survive but not without injury, and are stranded on the mountain terrain with harsh weather conditions closing in. Working together to battle the extreme elements of the remote snow covered landscape with its ever present dangers, they embark on a perilous journey across hundreds of miles of wilderness pushing each other to survive, whilst mustering the inner strengths when they come to realise that help is not going to be forthcoming. Also starring Dermot Mulroney as Alex's fiancee.

'THE ONLY LIVING BOY IN NEW YORK' (Rated M) - Directed by Marc Webb, whose previous Directing credits include '(500) Days of Summer', 'The Amazing Spider-Man' and 'The Amazing Spider-Man 2' and the also recently released 'Gifted' here tells a story of recent college graduate Thomas Webb (Callum Turner) who has recently moved into his own apartment. Here he gets to know his alcoholic neighbour W.F. Gerald (Jeff Bridges) who dispenses worldly advice with a nip of whiskey. Webb's world soon comes crashing down around him when he learns that his father Ethan Webb (Pierce Brosnan) is having an affair with a beautiful and seductive woman, Johanna (Kate Beckinsale) behind the back of his wife Judith (Cynthia Nixon). Determined to bring an end to their relationship, Thomas ends up sleeping with her, setting in motion a course of events that will change everything he thinks he knows about his family, and himself. The film was released in limited theatres in the US in early August, has so far taken just over US$1M and has garnered generally less than favourable Reviews.

'WHAT IF IT WORKS' (Rated M) - Written, Produced and Directed by Australian Romi Tower in her feature length film Directorial debut, this Romantic Dramedy stars Luke Ford as Adrian, a happy go lucky tech geek who suffers from OCD, and Anna Samson as Grace, an attractive young street artist who suffers from multiple personality disorder. Filmed on the colourful street art filled laneways of Melbourne, Victoria, the film tells the story of this couples unfolding relationship that in theory can't work, it simply shouldn't work . . . . but what if it did? Also starring Brooke Satchwell.

'HAPPY DEATH DAY' (Rated M) -  this horror slasher slice 'em & dice 'em version of 'Groundhog Day' arrives at our cinemas just in time for Halloween. Directed and Written by Christopher B. Landon whose previous feature film credits include 'Burning Palms', 'Paranormal Activity : The Marked Ones' and 'Scouts Guide to the Zombie Apocalypse', this film sees college student Tree Gelbman (Jessica Rothe) waking up on her birthday morning in the bed of fellow student Carter Davis (Israel Broussard). As the day wears on, Tree gets an uneasy feeling that she has experienced that days events before. When a masked killer takes her life in a brutal attack, she wakes up again in that same bed on her Birthday morning unharmed. Now, in a continuos time loop, Tree must relive that terrifying experience time after time, until she can figure out who her killer is. Also starring Ruby Modine (daughter of Matthew), and is released in the US on Friday 13th!

'THE FOREIGNER' (Rated MA15+) - Directed by Martin Campbell whose previous Directorial credits include two Bond outings with 'Goldeneye' and 'Casino Royale', 'The Mask of Zorro' and 'The Legend of Zorro', 'Edge of Darkness' and 'Green Lantern' this action thriller is based on the 1992 novel 'The Chinaman' by Stephen Leather. Here Quan Ngoc Minh (Jackie Chan) is a humble London businessman whose long since buried past spills over in a revenge-fuelled vendetta when his teenage daughter dies in a senseless act of politically motivated terrorism. His relentless search to locate the terrorists leads to a cat-and-mouse conflict with a high ranking official within the British government, Liam Hennessy (Pierce Brosnan), whose own past may hold the clues to the identities of the elusive killers. The film cost US$35M to make and has so far taken US$67M since its initial release in China at the end of September.

'GOOD TIME' (Rated MA15+) - this crime drama film is Directed by brothers Ben and Josh Safdie and Premiered at the 2017 Cannes Film Festival where it was in competition for the Palme d'Or. It was released in limited theatres across the US back in early August, and now gets its limited release in Australia. The film has generated generally positive press and has so far taken just US$2M at the Box Office. The story here unfolds following a bank robbery gone wrong that lands his younger brother in prison. So Constantine 'Connie' Nikas (Robert Pattinson) embarks on a twisted journey through the city's nefarious underbelly in an increasingly desperate, and often dangerous attempt to get his brother Nick (Ben Safdie) out of jail on Rikers Island. Over the course of one adrenaline fuelled night, Connie lurches into a mad descent into violence and mayhem as he races against the clock to save his brother and himself, knowing their lives hang in the balance. Also starring Jennifer Jason Leigh and Barkhad Abdi.

'BAD BLOOD' (Rated MA15+) - this Australian thriller offering is Written for the screen and Directed by David Pulbrook and gets its Australian release this week after its Premier screening at the Adelaide Film Festival. Carrie (Morgan Griffin) is a veterinarian who goes on a weekend holiday with her fiancee Vincent (Xavier Samuel), a best-selling author. He however, hides a dark secret from his past, added to which he begins to experience weird occurrences each day. It is almost as though someone is following him, and if so what do they want? They spend the weekend at an isolated house in the middle of a nowhere forest to celebrate their recent engagement where Carrie finds that Vincent may not be what he seems, and as cracks begin to emerge in their relationship, can they really trust each other, or will their bond strengthen as though their lives depend upon it.

'THIS BEAUTIFUL FANTASTIC' (Rated PG) - Written and Directed by Simon Aboud, this Romantic Drama film was released way back in October 2016 and only now gets its Australian release in selected cinemas. Starring Jessica Brown Findlay as Bella Brown, a reclusive yet quirky aspiring children's author who works in a library while trying to write a children's book. It is a condition of the landlord from whom she rents her house that she also maintains the garden, but she hates plants and therefore gardening. As the garden becomes increasingly overgrown and neglected, her landlord gives her one month to fix up the garden otherwise she's out on her ear! In so doing, reluctantly, she develops friendships with her cantankerous neighbour, his cook/housekeeper, and an inventor who is a frequent visitor to the library. Also starring Tom Wilkinson, Andrew Scott, Jeremy Irvine and Sheila Hancock.

'BLUE' (Rated PG) - Directed by Karina Hudson this is a challenging feature documentary that delves into the ongoing perils of our oceans’ ecological systems. Two years in the making, this films aim is to boost global awareness of plastic’s effect on the environment to save our oceans. With half the marine life from our oceans lost in the last forty years, and by 2050 there is likely to be more plastic floating in our oceans than fish, 'Blue' examines themes of habitat destruction, species loss and pollution on a global scale. Hudson’s solid cinematic vision captures six thought provoking action-adventure segments set across the Pacific Ocean around Australia, the Philippines, Indonesia and the USA. These are the stories of everyday people striving to protect the oceans and raise awareness of pollutant dangers in order to protect the oceans and the fragile ecosystems living with it for generations to come. A highly relevant and thought provoking film.

With nine new release films this week to tempt you out to your local Odeon, taking in a three Australian releases, a romantic adventure survival film, a romantic drama, a drama, a crime drama, an action thriller and a horror slasher offering. Remember to share your movie going thoughts with your other like minded cinephiles afterwards here at Odeon Online, and meanwhile, I'll see you sometime somewhere in the week ahead at your local Odeon.

-Steve, at Odeon Online-